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6866


Date: February 24, 2020 at 09:27:50
From: Redhart, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Hidden Figures, Katherine Johnson, passes at age 101

URL: https://www.nytimes.com/2020/02/24/science/katherine-johnson-dead.html


What a strong woman and an asset to our country--RIP
Katherine, and thank you for all you have done for
America:


Katherine Johnson Dies at 101; Mathematician Broke
Barriers at NASA
She was one of a group of black women mathematicians
at NASA and its predecessor who were celebrated in the
2016 movie “Hidden Figures.”

By Margalit Fox
Feb. 24, 2020
Updated 11:44 a.m. ET

They asked Katherine Johnson for the moon, and she
gave it to them.

Wielding little more than a pencil, a slide rule and
one of the finest mathematical minds in the country,
Mrs. Johnson, who died at 101 on Monday at a
retirement home in Newport News, Va., calculated the
precise trajectories that would let Apollo 11 land on
the moon in 1969 and, after Neil Armstrong’s history-
making moonwalk, let it return to Earth.

A single error, she well knew, could have dire
consequences for craft and crew. Her impeccable
calculations had already helped plot the successful
flight of Alan B. Shepard Jr., who became the first
American in space when his Mercury spacecraft went
aloft in 1961.

The next year, she likewise helped make it possible
for John Glenn, in the Mercury vessel Friendship 7, to
become the first American to orbit the Earth.

Yet throughout Mrs. Johnson’s 33 years in NASA’s
Flight Research Division — the office from which the
American space program sprang — and for decades
afterward, almost no one knew her name.

Mrs. Johnson was one of several hundred rigorously
educated, supremely capable yet largely unheralded
women who, well before the modern feminist movement,
worked as NASA mathematicians.

But it was not only her sex that kept her long
marginalized and long unsung: Katherine Coleman Goble
Johnson, a West Virginia native who began her
scientific career in the age of Jim Crow, was also
African-American.

In old age, Mrs. Johnson became the most celebrated of
the small cadre of black women — perhaps three dozen —
who at midcentury served as mathematicians for the
space agency and its predecessor, the National
Advisory Committee for Aeronautics.

Their story was told in the 2016 Hollywood film
“Hidden Figures,” based on Margot Lee Shetterly’s
nonfiction book of the same title, published that
year. The movie starred Taraji P. Henson as Mrs.
Johnson, the film’s central figure. It also starred
Octavia Spencer and Janelle Monáe as her real-life
colleagues Dorothy Vaughan and Mary Jackson.

In January 2017 “Hidden Figures” received the Screen
Actors Guild Award for outstanding performance by a
cast in a motion picture.

The film was nominated for three Oscars, including
best picture. Though it won none, the 98½-year-old
Mrs. Johnson received a sustained standing ovation
when she appeared onstage with the cast at the Academy
Awards ceremony that February.

Of the black women at the center of the film, Mrs.
Johnson was the only one still living at the time of
its release. By then, she had become the best-known
member of her formerly unknown cohort.

In 2015, President Barack Obama awarded her the
Presidential Medal of Freedom, proclaiming, “Katherine
G. Johnson refused to be limited by society’s
expectations of her gender and race while expanding
the boundaries of humanity’s reach.”

In 2017, NASA dedicated a building in her honor, the
Katherine G. Johnson Computational Research Facility,
at its Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va.

That year, The Washington Post described her as “the
most high-profile of the computers” — “computers”
being the term originally used to designate Mrs.
Johnson and her colleagues, much as “typewriters” was
used in the 19th century to denote professional
typists.

She “helped our nation enlarge the frontiers of
space,” NASA’s administrator, Jim Bridenstine, said in
a statement on Monday, “even as she made huge strides
that also opened doors for women and people of color
in the universal human quest to explore space.”

As Mrs. Johnson herself was fond of saying, her tenure
at Langley — from 1953 until her retirement in 1986 —
was “a time when computers wore skirts.”

For some years at midcentury, the black women who
worked as “computers” were subjected to a double
segregation: Consigned to separate office, dining and
bathroom facilities, they were kept separate from the
much larger group of white women who also worked as
NASA mathematicians. The white women in turn were
segregated from the agency’s male mathematicians and
engineers.

“As Good as Anybody”
But over time, the work of Mrs. Johnson and her
colleagues — myriad calculations done mainly by hand,
using slide rules, graph paper and clattering desktop
calculating machines — won them a level of acceptance
that for the most part transcended race.

“NASA was a very professional organization,” Mrs.
Johnson told The Observer of Fayetteville, N.C., in
2010. “They didn’t have time to be concerned about
what color I was.”

Nor, she said, did she.

“I don’t have a feeling of inferiority,” Mrs. Johnson
said on at least one occasion. “Never had. I’m as good
as anybody, but no better.”

To the end of her life, Mrs. Johnson deflected praise
for her role in sending astronauts into space, keeping
them on course and bringing them safely home.

“I was just doing my job,” Ms. Shetterly heard her say
repeatedly in the course of researching her book.

But what a job it was — done, no less, by a woman born
at a time, Ms. Shetterly wrote, “when the odds were
more likely that she would die before age 35 than even
finish high school.”

Creola Katherine Coleman was born on Aug. 26, 1918, in
White Sulphur Springs, W.Va., the youngest of four
children of Joshua and Joylette (Lowe) Coleman. Her
mother was a schoolteacher, her father a farmer.

From her earliest childhood Katherine counted things:
the number of dishes in the cupboard, the number of
steps on the way to church and, as insurmountable a
task as it might pose for one old enough to be
daunted, the number of stars in the sky.

“I couldn’t wait to get to high school to take algebra
and geometry,” Mrs. Johnson told The Associated Press
in 1999.

But for black children, the town’s segregated
educational system went as far as only sixth grade.
Thus, every fall, Joshua Coleman moved his family 125
miles away to Institute, W.Va.

In Institute, Katherine’s older siblings, and then
Katherine, attended the high school associated with
the West Virginia Collegiate Institute, a historically
black institution that became West Virginia State
College and is now West Virginia State University.

Mr. Coleman remained in White Sulphur Springs to farm,
and, when the Depression made farming untenable, to
work as a bellman at the Greenbrier, a world-renowned
resort there.

Katherine entered high school at 10 and graduated at
14. The next year she entered West Virginia State. By
her junior year, she had taken all the math courses
the college had to offer.

Her mentor there, William Waldron Schieffelin Claytor,
only the third black person to earn a doctorate in
mathematics from an American university, conceived
special classes just for her.

“You would make a good research mathematician,” he
told his 17-year-old charge. “And I am going to
prepare you for this career.”

“Where will I find a job?” Katherine asked.

“That,” he replied, “will be your problem.”

After graduating summa cum laude in 1937 with a double
major in mathematics and French, she found,
unsurprisingly, that research opportunities for black
female teenage mathematicians were negligible. She
took a job as a schoolteacher in Marion, Va.

In 1940, she was chosen by the president of West
Virginia State to be one of three black graduate
students to integrate West Virginia University, the
all-white institution in Morgantown.

Two years earlier, ruling in the civil-rights case
Missouri ex rel. Gaines v. Canada, the United States
Supreme Court held that where comparable graduate
programs did not exist at black universities in
Missouri, the state was obliged to admit black
graduate students to its white state universities. In
the wake of that decision, West Virginia’s governor,
Homer Holt, chose to desegregate public graduate
schools in his state.

Now married to James Francis Goble, a chemistry
teacher, she entered West Virginia University in the
summer of 1940, studying advanced mathematics.

“The greatest challenge she faced,” Ms. Shetterly
wrote, “was finding a course that didn’t duplicate Dr.
Claytor’s meticulous tutelage.”

But after that summer session, on discovering she was
pregnant with her first child, she withdrew from the
university. She returned with her husband to Marion
and was occupied with marriage, motherhood and
teaching for more than a decade.

NASA Opens to Women
Then, in 1952, Katherine Goble heard that Langley was
hiring black women as mathematicians.

The oldest of NASA’s field centers, Langley had been
established by the National Advisory Committee for
Aeronautics in 1917. In 1935, it began hiring white
women with mathematics degrees to relieve its male
engineers of the tedious work of crunching numbers by
hand.

Within a decade, several hundred white women had been
employed as computers there. Most, unlike the male
scientists at the agency, were classified as
subprofessionals, paid less than their male
counterparts.

In June 1941, as the nation prepared for war,
President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order
8802, barring racial discrimination in the defense
industry. In 1943, with the wartime need for human
computers greater than ever, the Langley Memorial
Aeronautical Laboratory, as the research facility was
then known, began advertising for black women trained
in mathematics.

Among the first hired was Dorothy Vaughan, who began
work that year. In 1951, Mrs. Vaughan became the first
black section head at NACA, as the advisory committee
was known, when she was officially placed in charge
of Langley’s West Area Computing Unit, the segregated
office to which the black women were relegated.

It was in this unit that Katherine Goble began work in
June 1953, tabulating sheets of data for the agency’s
engineers.

By the time she arrived, the company cafeteria had
already undergone de facto desegregation: Its “Colored
Computers” sign, designating a table in the back for
the women, had been a salubrious casualty of the war
years. But the separate bathrooms remained.

Quite by accident, Katherine Goble broke that color
line herself. While the agency’s bathrooms for black
employees were marked as such, many bathrooms for
whites were unmarked.

Without realizing it, she had been using a white
women’s restroom since her arrival. By the time she
became aware of her error, she was set in her routine
and disinclined to change. No one took her to task,
and she used the white bathrooms from then on.

Two weeks into her new job, she was borrowed by the
Flight Research Division, which occupied an immense
hangar on the Langley grounds.

There, the only black member of the staff, she helped
calculate the aerodynamic forces on airplanes. For
that task, as she quickly demonstrated, she came armed
with an invaluable asset.

“The guys all had graduate degrees in mathematics;
they had forgotten all the geometry they ever knew,”
Mrs. Johnson said in the Fayetteville Observer
interview. “I still remembered mine.”

She remained in the division for the rest of her
career.

By the early 1960s, with the United States provoked by
Soviet prowess in space, NASA was under great pressure
to launch an astronaut. It fell to the Flight Research
Division to do many of the associated calculations.

“Our assignment was the trajectory,” Mrs. Johnson
explained to The Associated Press. “As NASA got ready
to put someone in space, they needed to know what the
launch conditions were. It was our assignment to
develop the launch window and determine where it was
going to land.”

Clandestine Calculations
Their work was secret — at times even from the
mathematicians themselves.

“We were the pioneers of the space era,” Mrs. Johnson
told The Daily Press, a Virginia newspaper, in 1990.
“You had to read Aviation Week to find out what you’d
done.”

She routinely logged 16-hour days, once falling asleep
at the wheel of her car and waking up — safe,
providentially — at the side of the road.

But the work engaged her deeply.

“I loved every single day of it,” she told Ms.
Shetterly. “There wasn’t one day when I didn’t wake up
excited to go to work.”

It helped sustain her through the death of her first
husband from brain cancer in 1956, leaving her, at 38,
a widow with three adolescent daughters. She married
James A. Johnson, a United States Army captain, in
1959.

Over the years, Mrs. Johnson published more than two
dozen technical papers. She was among the first women
at NASA to be a named author or co-author on an agency
report.

Ceaselessly curious about the aerospace technology
that underpinned her work, she made it possible for
women to attend the agency’s scientific briefings,
formerly closed-door affairs reserved for male staff
members. (“Is there a law against it?” Mrs. Johnson
asked, and when her male colleagues, after some head-
scratching, concluded that, no, there was no law, they
let her in.)

After retiring from NASA, Mrs. Johnson became a public
advocate for mathematics education, speaking widely
and visiting schools.

Her death was announced by NASA. She is survived by
two daughters, Joylette Hylick and Katherine Moore;
six grandchildren; and 11 great-grandchildren. Another
daughter, Connie Garcia, died in 2010; her second
husband, James Johnson, died in 2019.

Mrs. Johnson’s colleague Mary Jackson died in 2005;
Dorothy Vaughan died in 2008.

In 2016, Mrs. Johnson, self-effacing as ever at 98,
seemed somewhat indifferent to the fuss surrounding
the feature film about her life.

“I shudder,” she told The New York Times that
September, some three months before the film’s
release, having heard that the screenwriters might
have made her character seem a tiny bit aggressive. “I
was never aggressive.” (As things transpired, Mrs.
Johnson liked the finished film very much, Ms.
Shetterly said in an interview for this obituary in
2017.)

Mrs. Johnson may not have been aggressive, but she was
assuredly esteemed. An index of just how esteemed she
was came from Mr. Glenn, Mercury astronaut and future
United States senator, who died in 2016.

In early 1962, a few days before he prepared to orbit
the Earth in Friendship 7, Mr. Glenn made a final
check of his planned orbital trajectory. The
trajectory had been generated by a computer — not the
flesh-and-blood kind, but the electronic sort, which
were starting to supplant the agency’s human
calculators.

Electronic computation was still something of a
novelty at NASA, and Mr. Glenn was unsettled by the
use of a soulless mass of metal to divine something on
which his life depended.

He asked that Mrs. Johnson double-check the machine’s
figures by hand.

“If she says the numbers are good,” he declared, “I’m
ready to go.


Responses:
[6868]


6868


Date: February 28, 2020 at 05:48:43
From: kay.so.or, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Hidden Figures, Katherine Johnson, passes at age 101


thanks for posting...what an awesome story about an awesome woman(and the other women).I saw the movie and what a wake up call, once again about discrimination and the odds that so many have faced and still face I am sorry to say. She was the same age as my mom, who also was the math person in the family, still balancing her checkbook to the penny before she died at 91. I didn't inherit that..lol.


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